Chemotherapy drugs are "cytotoxic" (cell-killing) drugs. They are given orally or by injection. They work systemically by killing cancer cells throughout the body. (Unfortunately, they also kill some normal cells, which accounts for many of their side effects.) Chemotherapy is always used for advanced breast cancer, but may also be used to treat types of early-stage breast cancer.
Newer biologic drugs target specific proteins involved in cancer. Treatment with these drugs is called...
Read moreMy wife, Keri Haberstroh, was diagnosed with breast cancer at age 25 in 2005. My name is Doug, and I am here to tell Keri's breast cancer... Read more »
With Breast Cancer Comics by Dash Shaw It's been five years since I finished treatment for breast cancer, the demon that claimed my... Read more »
As a medical oncologist, I recently met with a breast cancer patient and her breast surgeon to determine the best course of treatment for... Read more »
You’ve been through every drug the oncologist has in his or her bag of tricks, yet nothing has managed to quell those debilitating side... Read more »
Q. I've been taking Herceptin for quite some time for my advanced HER2-positive breast cancer. The Herceptin worked for awhile, but... Read more »
Q. What with all the side effects I had during chemotherapy, I really wasn’t in the mood for sex very often. And now that I’m done with chemo,... Read more »
See All of Keri's Breast Cancer Comics Read more »
See All of Keri's Breast Cancer Comics Read more »
Background Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is a relatively rare type of breast cancer grows in the lymph vessels of the skin of the breast. Because... Read more »
Source: Breastcancer.org
Certain chemotherapies can force the ovaries into retirement within a few months of treatment: This is medical menopause. Fifty percent of women... Read more »